A most distinctive read, this is one of those novels in verse form, but one that feels more novelistic than many. I've accused many of them I've read of sounding like short stories or novellas just designed to cover more pages and to look like a novel when they're not – I doubt anyone would think that here. We have a mixed-race British family, getting kicked out of their home and the community library they run, due to lack of funds. But immediately at the right instant they get to inherit a strange and strangely abandoned clifftop home – although just when they start to settle happily in they learn all is not as it seems…
This is a piece that juggles three things – mundane, fantastical and emotional. The mundane is the nitty-gritty of then inheriting, and sorting through what seems to be saying they have to move on again, against their will. The emotional is very much linked to that – the talk of family, home, positivity, the follow-your-dreams lesson passed down one midnight. The fantastical I think is perhaps the most interesting, but the part of the book that the least is done with, ultimately – the way the house is practically alive, giving the people in it what they want, doing the chores for them, and the way the local village remembers the other people who lived there.
So this is a heart-warming message, a drama with a deadline, and something that (initially at least) gives a couple of light chills. And it's doing everything pretty well, especially when you see those are quite differently-sized balls to keep on juggling. The central relationship between the sisters here, the younger one narrating and the more whipsmart older one learning her adult cynicism, is really enjoyable to read, too. The younger has an issue with intrusive thoughts I didn't think came across wonderfully, and the place an aspect of it has at the conclusion of the drama makes you question how sincerely the whole thing was included. But minor flaws don't get in the way of this being a pretty intriguing effort, and one I was glad to have enjoyed.